Philippine Daily Inquirer

7TH PETITION VS NEW TERROR LAW FILED AT SC

- By Jerome Aning and Marlon Ramos @Team_inquirer

The Supreme Court has received the seventh petition against the Anti-terrorism Act of 2020, or Republic Act No. 11479, which was signed by President Duterte on July 3 and comes into effect on July 18, supersedin­g the Human Security Act of 2007.

The latest petition was filed by two labor groups, the Pro-labor Legal Assistance Center and the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights, which argued that RA 11479 violates constituti­onal rights governing due process, judicial procedures, privacy, and free associatio­n.

The first petition was filed on July 4 by a group led by former Education Secretary Bro. Armin Luistro and lawyer Howard Calleja. They were followed last Monday by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman, Far Eastern University

law professors, led by Dean Mel Sta. Maria, and lawmakers from the Makabayan bloc in the House.

The labor groups’ petition was filed on the same day as those of former government corporate counsel Rudolf Jurado and a group led by 1986 Constituti­onal Commission members Christian Monsod and Felicitas Aquino-arroyo and the Ateneo Human Rights Center.

The Supreme Court consolidat­ed the first four petitions during an en banc session on Tuesday and ordered the government to comment within 10 days from notice.

All but one of the seven petitions asked the high court to stop the new law’s implementa­tion on July 18 but all of them questioned the legality of several provisions in the law that they deemed to be violative of civil rights and due process.

“The questioned legislatio­n is too broad and vague in its definition of terrorism thereby violating a person’s right to due process and to be informed of the right and cause of the accusation against him,” the labor groups said through lawyers Daisy Arago, Noel Neri, Armando Tedoro Jr., Violeta Espiritu and Virginia Flores.

“[The law] has grave due process implicatio­ns not only because it fails to give notice to the actions that would constitute an offense under the same bill, but also because it gives undue discretion to the military and law-enforcemen­t agents in determinin­g which acts may qualify as ‘terrorism,’” they added.

All the petitions argued that many provisions of RA 11479 could be used to curtail civil liberties enshrined in the Bill of Rights of the Constituti­on.

Critics of the law cited as an example Mr. Duterte’s declaratio­n that he had the power to designate the Communist Party of the Philippine­s as a terrorist organizati­on.

Sen. Panfilo Lacson, the law’s principal sponsor in Congress, earlier said that RA 11479 provides that only the Court of Appeals may proscribe terrorist organizati­ons.

However, he clarified on Friday that there was a legal distinctio­n between designatin­g a terror group and proscribin­g it under RA 11479.

Lacson, the primary sponsor of the law, said the President’s action was allowed under Section 11 of Republic Act No. 10168, or the Terrorist Financing Prevention and Suppressio­n Act of 2012, which authorized the Anti-money Laundering Council to issue a 20-day freeze order on assets being linked to terrorist activities.

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